The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Tucker reverses decision not to add Juneteenth as paid holiday

City leaders say they were not swayed by pushback.

- By Zachary Hansen zachary.hansen@ajc.com

Months after a vote failed to add Juneteenth as a paid city holiday in Tucker, city leaders reconsider­ed and unanimousl­y decided to close City Hall for the holiday this year.

Two councilwom­en added an item to the city’s Monday meeting agenda that would add Juneteenth, the celebratio­n of the end of slavery in the U.S., to the city’s holiday calendar. Given that it passed, the city will have 12 paid holidays in 2022.

The vote was preceded by discussion from nearly every city leader, with some happy that Juneteenth was getting more recognitio­n in Tucker while others begrudged the community pushback they received for voting against it previously.

“I’m fine with it, except that I think it’s been a bad process,” Mayor Frank Auman said roughly four hours into the meeting. “And there’s going to be a cost in the future for having done it in pieces and reacting instead of responding.”

Auman and several councilmem­bers received community backlash after they approved an 11-holiday calendar on Feb. 15 without adding Juneteenth. Councilwom­an Alexis Weaver tried to add Juneteenth to the calendar at the last minute, but her motion was voted down 5-2. Councilwom­an Noelle Monferdini was the other vote in favor of adding Juneteenth.

Weaver later told The Atlanta Journal-constituti­on she was frustrated Tucker wouldn’t follow in the footsteps of the federal, state and county government­s in adding Juneteenth as a paid city holiday.

“If the state can do it, if the federal government can do it, I just think that there’s something to be said for acknowledg­ing and closing down (the city) and saying this has a very particular meaning that we should formally acknowledg­e,” Weaver told the AJC last month.

Monday’s resolution was proposed by two Tucker councilmem­bers who previously voted against adding Juneteenth: Virginia Rece and Cara Schroeder. They called Juneteenth an “important holiday,” mentioning the months of community conversati­on sparked by February’s vote.

“Even if you think the process may have been late, I don’t think we’re too late,” Rece said.

Juneteenth became a controvers­ial topic in Tucker, mirroring similar contention­s in Marietta. The Cobb County city unanimousl­y voted to add Juneteenth and Veterans Day to its paid holiday calendar in late April — roughly two weeks after the city’s mayor vetoed making Juneteenth a city holiday.

On Monday, Auman reiterated that he’s been disappoint­ed by the discourse and process surroundin­g Juneteenth’s holiday status in Tucker.

“At some point, there’s a limit to what we can take off.

We have to serve our public. There are all kind of things that figure into it more than just, ‘Is this a worthy holiday,” Auman said.

Councilman Roger Orlando agreed with Auman, adding that there are multiple factors to consider when closing City Hall. He mentioned that each paid holiday costs the city between $25,000 and $30,000.

He also emphasized that his changed vote wasn’t due to the backlash he and others received, instead saying Juneteenth’s holiday status is deserved on its own merits.

“After that (February) vote, I’ll also note that a number of us, but for some reason

especially me, took withering criticism on social media and in online, so-called news media,” Orlando said. “My vote tonight... will not be based upon the loudest voice, pressure or bullying put on by certain members of the public.”

Juneteenth, which is celebrated on June 19, falls on a Sunday this year, so the holiday would be observed on June 20.

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